馃攳
Why The U.S. Dollar May Be In Danger - YouTube
Channel: CNBC
[0]
Analysts have been warning of the dollar's impending doom.
[4]
I don't want to be overly dramatic, but I think it's.
[6]
I will use the word doomed in the long term.
[10]
The US dollar is the most powerful currency that exists
today.
[15]
It's accepted and traded almost everywhere in the world and
has shown strong
[19]
resilience through numerous financial shocks and mounting
fiscal debt.
[23]
The US dollar for the last couple of decades has been the
preeminent global
[28]
currency in virtually every dimension you can think of.
[32]
It allows us to have a great demand for our currency and for
our
[36]
bonds. So it often allows us to live a bit beyond our means
so
[42]
we can borrow easily and at low interest rates in the world
to finance economic growth.
[46]
But some experts worry that the dollar's dominance may be
under threat.
[51]
We tend to think that nothing could ever dislodge the dollar
from this
[56]
preeminent status as the world's currency.
[60]
That view is overblown and ultimately will be challenged.
[64]
So what poses a threat to the dollar status as the world's
reserve currency?
[69]
And just how long can its dominance last?
[75]
America's growing account deficit is one of the biggest
threats to the
[80]
dollar.
[80]
The US dollar ought to be under threat.
[83]
After all, the US government has been running massive
deficits for a long time, which should
[88]
in principle be reflected in high inflation, which in turn
should
[93]
reduce the dollar's value and the dollar's role as an
international currency.
[97]
This is most evident in America's current account deficit,
which means the value
[102]
of imported goods and services exceeds the value of
exported goods and services.
[107]
The current account balance, as we call it, has been in
deficit every
[111]
single year since the early 1980s.
[116]
Some years it's modest and some years it's big and right
now it's
[121]
big in the US.
[122]
During the fourth quarter of 2021, the US current account
deficit hit
[126]
$217.9 billion, amounting to
[130]
3.6% of America's GDP.
[133]
Experts like Stephen Roach believe that this growing
deficit is directly related
[138]
to a low national saving rate.
[141]
And when countries do not save, which is the case in the
United
[145]
States, we end up borrowing surplus savings from abroad to
square
[150]
the circle. We can do that because we have this almighty
dollar, the
[155]
world's great reserve currency, and so we have been
borrowing massive
[160]
amounts of foreign savings from abroad, and it provides a
relatively
[165]
painless way of financing our current account deficit until
something
[170]
happens that changes the minds of foreign
[174]
nations who want to lend us their surplus capital, their
surplus
[180]
saving. And I think there's a risk of that down the road as
our
[184]
international balance of payments deficit continues to
expand.
[189]
The US dollar has been the world's reserve currency since
most countries
[194]
abandoned the gold standard.
[196]
America went off the gold standard.
[198]
A ounce of gold split up into 20 pieces each called a
dollar.
[204]
That means a substantial amount is held by central banks and
major financial
[208]
institutions to use for international transactions.
[211]
But its share has been steadily dropping.
[214]
During the fourth quarter of 2020, dollar share in the
Global Foreign Exchange Reserve dropped to
[219]
its lowest share in over 25 years.
[222]
The rise in alternative currencies may be to blame.
[225]
It has come down partly because of the introduction of the
euro.
[229]
The euro has become held to a greater extent over the
years.
[234]
The renminbi started playing a role as a reserve currency
just a few years ago.
[238]
And it accounts for a relatively modest share, less than 3%
of global foreign exchange
[243]
reserves. But it's been chipping away very modestly at the
dollar's
[247]
role. Plus, there are other reserve currencies, including
the Japanese yen, the British
[252]
pound sterling, but even some of the smaller reserve
currencies, such as the
[257]
Canadian dollar and the Australian dollar, that have all
gained marginally
[262]
in terms of their shares.
[263]
While the recent geopolitical crisis has caused investors to
flock to the dollar,
[268]
strengthening its position, whether that safety will last
is another
[272]
question.
[273]
The fact that we may have overlooked some alternatives,
whether it's the
[277]
euro, the renminbi or, dare I say,
[281]
cryptocurrencies, the case for a weaker dollar is one
[286]
that I think we will then address again.
[290]
Why does the value of the dollar decrease and increase?
[294]
When the dollar softens, it usually isn't a cause for
concern.
[298]
In fact, it could even be beneficial for the US economy.
[302]
Sometimes if the economy is faltering, having a weaker
currency can
[307]
provide a boost to those exports by making them more
competitive in the global market.
[312]
So a weaker dollar at times could certainly be a benefit.
[316]
The flip side is too weak s dollar means that you tend to
get high
[320]
inflation and that can be discouraging to foreign
investment.
[324]
If the dollar becomes too weak, it has the potential to have
a catastrophic
[328]
impact on the American economy.
[331]
It would make imports a lot more expensive, and that would
certainly drive up
[335]
inflation. And if that came at a time when inflation was
already rising, as is the case right
[340]
now, that would certainly put a lot of pressure on the US
economy.
[343]
If foreign investors started dumping U.S.
[346]
government bonds and other types that would certainly drive
up interest rates, which would in turn would
[351]
make them basically all the rates on borrowing by U.S.
[354]
consumers and companies much more expensive, which might
substantially affect both
[359]
consumption and investment and bring down economic growth.
[362]
In response, the equity and commodity market would most
likely take a hit as
[367]
well.
[367]
Most commodities are priced in dollars, and if the dollar
were to go
[372]
down, that would certainly have a significant impact on
commodity prices around the
[377]
world.
[378]
A severely weakened dollar would also mean bad news for
economies around the
[383]
world that have grown dependent on.
[385]
It certainly would reduce the value of a lot of US dollar
assets and that could
[389]
create a lot of havoc in the global economy.
[392]
Any time you have turmoil in U.S.
[395]
financial markets, that is going to spill over to the rest
of the world.
[398]
The same is going to be true of the U.S.
[400]
dollar because after all, when the U.S.
[402]
dollar depreciates, it has to depreciate against the
[406]
other currencies of the world.
[408]
And that would hurt those economies because many of them,
including the Eurozone,
[413]
China, Japan, they rely a great deal on exports for
economic growth.
[419]
Most experts, however, argue that the US dollar is far from
the end of its reign.
[424]
I think the chances of that happening in my lifetime are
negligible.
[428]
The world's reserve currency, which the US dollar is,
usually has an independent central
[433]
bank. It has a strong, usually military backing to provide
that
[438]
security, has deep and liquid bond markets that foreign
investors can invest
[442]
in. When we've seen concerns about events in the global
economy, whether it's the
[447]
economy or geopolitical events, the dollar has gone up, not
down.
[451]
It's seen as a safe haven.
[452]
What happens when there is financial turmoil either in the
U.S.
[455]
or around the world? Investors around the world are going
to look for safety and what is the
[460]
only real place that you can go for safety in large
amounts?
[465]
The US financial markets.
[466]
This is why I think a dollar collapse actually is quite
unlikely because
[471]
the implications of a dollar collapse that you would have a
real search for safety
[476]
and the only really safe place to put lots of money remains
the
[481]
US.
[481]
While the pandemic did cause volatility in the price of the
dollar, its value today hasn't
[486]
seen much decline compared to prices before the pandemic.
[490]
The US economy has done better than most other economies
through the pandemic.
[495]
It's recovered more quickly.
[496]
Our interest rates are moving up faster than they are in
other countries, which means you earn
[501]
more by putting your money in US dollars than you might say
earn in Japanese
[506]
yen or alternatives.
[507]
The dollar continues to be quite strong.
[510]
And then when we get these moments of flight to safety, as
we've seen with the outbreak
[515]
of the war in Ukraine, the dollar's actually tended to go
up as investors
[519]
look to the most liquid and safest markets to put their
money in.
[524]
Concerns over account deficit and the net savings rate could
be overblown.
[528]
We've certainly seen our debt to GDP rise, but our cost
[533]
of financing the debt has been quite low, so it hasn't been
particularly onerous
[538]
for the economy to service that debt.
[541]
Most importantly, while there may be alternatives to the
dollar, there just isn't a realistic
[546]
alternative for reserve currency.
[548]
When you think about what's required to have the world's
reserve currency, it needs to be freely
[552]
convertible. China's currency is not.
[555]
They have capital controls.
[557]
You need an independent central bank.
[559]
You need large and liquid debt markets.
[561]
Europe certainly is a large economy, but their debt markets
are somewhat
[566]
fragmented because it's a combination of different
countries.
[569]
And so you put that all together and right now there's no
kind of present currency
[574]
alternative. I don't know what the future of crypto is, but
it was
[579]
certainly nowhere close, I would say in the evolution of
that, to even think about it, you know,
[584]
taking the place of the US dollar.
[586]
For now, the dollar's dominance will likely continue, but so
will speculation
[590]
surrounding its health.
[591]
The dollar is emblematic of strength in international
finance, but it's
[596]
also emblematic of the obligation that we have.
[600]
For running our economy in a way that is compatible with
that enduring
[604]
strength. And there's a lot of issues, some of which I've
raised, that draw questions into
[609]
that presumption that need to be looked at very seriously.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





